Anatidae
The Anatidae are the biological family of water birds that includes ducks, geese, and swans. The family has a cosmopolitan distribution, occurring on all the world's continents. These birds are adapted for swimming, floating on the water surface, and in some cases diving in at least shallow water. The family contains around 146 species in 43 genera.
They are generally herbivorous, and are monogamous breeders. A number of species undertake annual migrations. A few species have been domesticated for agriculture, and many others are hunted for food and recreation. Five species have become extinct since 1600, and many more are threatened with extinction.
Description and ecology
The ducks, geese, and swans are small- to large-sized birds with a broad and elongated general body plan. Diving species vary from this in being rounder. Extant species range in size from the cotton pygmy goose, at as little as 26.5 cm and 164 g, to the trumpeter swan, at as much as 183 cm and 17.2 kg. The wings are short and pointed, and supported by strong wing muscles that generate rapid beats in flight. They typically have long necks, although this varies in degree between species. The legs are short, strong, and set far to the back of the body, and have a leathery feel with a scaly texture. Combined with their body shape, this can make some species awkward on land, but they are stronger walkers than other marine and water birds such as grebes or petrels. They typically have webbed feet, though a few species such as the Nene have secondarily lost their webbing. The bills are made of soft keratin with a thin and sensitive layer of skin on top. For most species, the shape of the bill tends to be more flattened to a greater or lesser extent. These contain serrated lamellae which are particularly well defined in the filter-feeding species.Their feathers are excellent at shedding water due to special oils. Many of the ducks display sexual dimorphism, with the males being more brightly coloured than the females. The swans, geese, and whistling-ducks lack sexually dimorphic plumage. Anatids are vocal birds, producing a range of quacks, honks, squeaks, and trumpeting sounds, depending on species; the female often has a deeper voice than the male.
Anatids are generally herbivorous as adults, feeding on various water-plants, although some species also eat fish, molluscs, or aquatic arthropods. One group, the mergansers, are primarily piscivorous, and have serrated bills to help them catch fish. In a number of species, the young include a high proportion of invertebrates in their diets, but become purely herbivorous as adults.
Breeding
The anatids are generally seasonal and monogamous breeders. The level of monogamy varies within the family; many of the smaller ducks only maintain the bond for a single season and find a new partner the following year, whereas the larger swans, geese and some of the more territorial ducks maintain pair bonds over a number of years, and even for life in some species. However, forced extrapair copulation among anatids is common, occurring in 55 species in 17 genera.Anatidae is a large proportion of the 3% of bird species to possess a penis, though they vary significantly in size, shape, and surface elaboration. Most species are adapted for copulation on the water only. They construct simple nests from whatever material is close at hand, often lining them with a layer of down plucked from the mother's breast. In most species, only the female incubates the eggs. The young are precocial, and are able to feed themselves from birth. One aberrant species, the black-headed duck, is an obligate brood parasite, laying its eggs in the nests of gulls and coots. While this species never raises its own young, a number of other ducks occasionally lay eggs in the nests of conspecifics in addition to raising their own broods.
Relationship with humans
Duck, eider, and goose feathers and down have long been popular for bedspreads, pillows, sleeping bags, and coats. The members of this family also have long been used for food.Humans have had a long relationship with ducks, geese, and swans; they are important economically and culturally to humans, and several duck species have benefited from an association with people. However, some anatids are damaging agricultural pests, and have acted as vectors for zoonoses such as avian influenza.
Since 1600, five species of ducks have become extinct due to the activities of humans, and subfossil remains have shown that humans caused numerous extinctions in prehistory. Today, many more are considered threatened. Most of the historic and prehistoric extinctions were insular species, vulnerable due to small populations, and island tameness. Evolving on islands that lacked predators, these species lost antipredator behaviours, as well as the ability to fly, and were vulnerable to human hunting pressure and introduced species. Other extinctions and declines are attributable to overhunting, habitat loss and modification, and hybridisation with introduced ducks. Numerous governments and conservation and hunting organisations have made considerable progress in protecting ducks and duck populations through habitat protection and creation, laws and protection, and captive-breeding programmes.
Systematics
The name Anatidae for the family was introduced by the English zoologist William Elford Leach in a guide to the contents of the British Museum published in 1820. While the status of the Anatidae as a family is straightforward, and which species properly belong to it is little debated, the relationships of the different tribes and subfamilies within it are poorly understood. The listing in the box at right should be regarded as simply one of several possible ways of organising the many species within the Anatidae; see discussion in the next section.The systematics of the Anatidae are in a state of flux. Previously divided into six subfamilies, a study of anatomical characters by Livezey suggests the Anatidae are better treated in nine subfamilies. This classification was popular in the late 1980s to 1990s. But mtDNA sequence analyses indicate, for example, the dabbling and diving ducks do not belong in the same subfamily.
While shortcomings certainly occur in Livezey's analysis, mtDNA is an unreliable source for phylogenetic information in many waterfowl due to their ability to produce fertile hybrids, in rare cases possibly even beyond the level of genus. Because the sample size of many molecular studies available to date is small, mtDNA results must be considered with caution.
While a comprehensive review of the Anatidae which unites all evidence into a robust phylogeny is still lacking, the reasons for the confusing data are at least clear: As demonstrated by the Late Cretaceous fossil Vegavis iaai — an early modern waterbird which belonged to an extinct lineage—the Anatidae are an ancient group among the modern birds. Their earliest direct ancestors, though not documented by fossils yet, likewise can be assumed to have been contemporaries with the dinosaurs. The long period of evolution and shifts from one kind of waterbird lifestyle to another have obscured many plesiomorphies, while apomorphies apparently are quite often the result of parallel evolution, for example the "non-diving duck" type displayed by such unrelated genera as Dendrocygna, Amazonetta, and Cairina. For the fossil record, see [|below].
Alternatively, the Anatidae may be considered to consist of three subfamilies which contain the groups as presented here as tribes, with the swans separated as subfamily Cygninae, the goose subfamily Anserinae also containing the whistling ducks, and the Anatinae containing all other clades.
Genera
For the living and recently extinct members of each genus, see the article List of Anatidae species.- Subfamily: Dendrocygninae
- * Dendrocygna, whistling ducks
- * Thalassornis, white-backed duck
- Subfamily: Anserinae, swans and geese
- * Cygnus, true swans
- * Anser, grey geese
- * Chen, white geese
- * Branta, black geese
- Subfamily: Stictonettinae
- * Stictonetta, freckled duck
- Subfamily: Plectropterinae
- * Plectropterus, spur-winged goose
- Subfamily: Tadorninae – shelducks and sheldgeese
- * Pachyanas, Chatham Island duck
- * Tadorna, shelducks – possibly paraphyletic
- * Radjah, Radjah shelduck
- * Salvadorina, Salvadori's teal
- * Centrornis, Madagascar sheldgoose
- * Alopochen, Egyptian goose and Mascarene shelducks
- * Neochen,
- * Chloephaga, sheldgeese
- * Hymenolaimus, blue duck
- * Merganetta, torrent duck
- Subfamily: Aythyinae, diving ducks
- * Netta, red-crested pochard and allies
- * Aythya, pochards, scaups, etc.
- Subfamily: Anatinae, dabbling ducks and moa-nalos
- * Chendytes, diving-geese
- * Spatula, shovelers
- * Mareca, wigeons and gadwalls
- * Lophonetta, crested duck
- * Speculanas, bronze-winged duck
- * Amazonetta, Brazilian teal
- * Sibirionetta, Baikal teal
- * Chelychelynechen, turtle-jawed moa-nalo
- * Thambetochen, large-billed moa-nalos
- * Ptaiochen, small-billed moa-nalo
- Tribe: Mergini, eiders, scoters, sawbills and other sea-ducks couple, male on the right.
- * Shiriyanetta
- * Polysticta, Steller's eider
- * Somateria, eiders
- * Histrionicus, harlequin duck
- * Camptorhynchus, Labrador duck
- * Melanitta, scoters
- * Clangula, long-tailed duck
- * Bucephala, goldeneyes
- * Mergellus, smew
- * Lophodytes, hooded merganser
- * Mergus, mergansers.
- Tribe: Oxyurini, stiff-tail ducks
- * Oxyura, stiff-tailed ducks
- * Nomonyx, masked duck
- * Heteronetta, black-headed duck
- Unresolved: The largest degree of uncertainty concerns whether a number of genera are closer to the shelducks or to the dabbling ducks., a species of unclear affiliation. Aix sponsa See also the monotypic subfamilies above, and the "perching ducks"
- * Coscoroba, coscoroba swan – Anserinae or same subfamily as Cereopsis?
- * Cereopsis, Cape Barren goose – Anserinae, Tadorninae, or own subfamily?
- * Biziura, musk ducks
- * Cnemiornis, New Zealand geese – as Cereopsis
- * Malacorhynchus, pink-eared ducks – Tadorninae, Oxyurinae or Dendrocheninae?
- * Sarkidiornis, comb duck – Tadorninae or closer to dabbling ducks?
- * Tachyeres, steamer ducks – Tadorninae or closer to dabbling ducks?
- * Cyanochen, blue-winged goose – Tadorninae or more distant clade?
- * Nettapus, pygmy geese – Anatinae or part of Southern Hemisphere radiation?
- * Pteronetta, Hartlaub's duck – traditionally dabbling ducks, but may be closer to Cyanochen
- * Cairina, Muscovy duck and white-winged duck – traditionally dabbling ducks, but may be paraphyletic, with one species in Tadorninae and the other closer to diving ducks
- * Aix, Mandarin duck and wood duck – dabbling ducks or Tadorninae?
- * Callonetta, ringed teal – dabbling ducks or Tadorninae?
- * Chenonetta, maned duck – dabbling ducks or Tadorninae? Includes Euryanas.
- * Marmaronetta, marbled duck – formerly dabbling ducks; actually a diving duck or a distinct subfamily
Prehistoric species
- Long-legged "shelduck", Anatidae sp. et gen. indet.
- Kaua'i mole duck, Talpanas lippa
Fossil Anatidae
The fossil record of anatids is extensive, but many prehistoric genera cannot be unequivocally assigned to present-day subfamilies for the reasons given above. For prehistoric species of extant genera, see the respective genus accounts.Dendrocheninae – a more advanced relative of the whistling-ducks or an ancestral relative of stifftail ducks paralleling whistling-ducks; if not extinct possibly belong in Oxyurinae
- Mionetta – includes "Anas" blanchardi, "A." consobrina, "A." natator, "Aythya" arvernensis
- Manuherikia
- Dendrochen – includes "Anas" integra, "A." oligocaena
- Dendrocheninae gen. et sp. indet.
Anserinae
- Cygnavus
- Cygnopterus – sometimes included in Cygnavus
- Megalodytes
- "cf. Megalodytes"
- Anserobranta – includes "Anas" robusta, validity doubtful
- Presbychen
- Afrocygnus
- Paracygnus
- Eremochen
- Australotadorna
- Miotadorna
- Tadorninae gen. et sp. indet.
- Balcanas – may be synonym of Tadorna or even common shelduck
- Anabernicula
- Brantadorna
- Nannonetta
- Sinanas
- Wasonaka
- Pinpanetta
- Dunstanetta – tentatively placed here
- Tirarinetta
- "Anas" luederitzensis – anatine?
- Matanas
- Anatidae gen. et sp. indet. MNZ S42797
- "Oxyura" doksana
- "Aythya" chauvirae – 2 species
- Anatidae gen. et sp. indet. – tadornine?
- Anatidae gen. et sp. indet.
- "Anas" meyerii Described from a single badly crushed tarsometatarsus and phalanges. This species was named in 1867 by Milne-Edwards and then recombined in 1964 by Brodkorb to the genus Aythya. This species is currently regarded as Aves incertae sedis.
- "Anas" velox – anatine? May include "A." meyerii
- "Anas" albae – mergine? Formerly in Mergus
- "Anas" isarensis – anatine?
- "Anser" scaldii – anserine or tadornine
- Anatidae gen. et sp. indet. – anatine, oxyurine?
- Anatidae gen. et sp. indet. – tadornine?
- "Anas" eppelsheimensis – anatine?
- Aldabranas – anatine or tadornine
- "Chenopis" nanus – at least 2 taxa, may be living species
- Garganornis
- Romainvillia – anseranatid or anatid
- Loxornis
- Paracygnopterus
- Teleornis
- Guguschia – anserine or Pelagornithidae
- Chenornis – anserine or Phalacrocoracidae
- Paranyroca – anatid or distinct family?
- Eoneornis – anatine? A nomen dubium
- Eutelornis – anatine?